GridReady WNY Guide

Backup & outages

What happens to solar during a power outage?

Backup and outage planning visual

Panels alone do not guarantee outage power. Your inverter and backup architecture determine what stays on.

Published: February 12, 2026Updated: April 5, 2026Read time: ~1 min

Reviewed for WNY outage patterns where short blips and occasional longer winter events both matter.

Quick answer

  • Standard grid-tied solar shuts off in a utility outage for lineworker safety.
  • Battery-backed or properly islanded systems can run selected loads.
  • Backup success depends on wiring design, transfer logic, and load selection.
  • Sensitive electronics may still need a UPS for no-blip continuity.

Who this guide is for

  • Homeowners who assume panels automatically power the house during outages.

Why this matters in WNY

  • WNY homes often experience both brief grid blips and weather-related longer outages.

Anti-islanding in plain English

Your system must not energize outside utility lines when crews are repairing outages. So a typical grid-tied inverter shuts down when it no longer "sees" grid reference.

Myth

I have panels, so I have backup.

Reality

Panels produce energy, but backup depends on inverter behavior, transfer controls, and load wiring.

What shuts off in each setup

Outage behavior by architecture

CategoryWhat usually happensWhat to verify in proposal
Grid-tied onlySolar shuts down; house is darkAny explicit backup claims should be treated as red flag unless hardware listed
Battery-backed solarCritical-load circuits can run after transferCheck transfer speed, supported loads, and runtime assumptions
Generator-supported setupLonger runtime if fuel availableCheck transfer switch design, maintenance plan, and fuel strategy

Electronics and short blips

Even good transfer systems can produce a brief interruption. For devices that cannot blink off (modems, NAS, medical equipment), use dedicated UPS units.

Electrician note

A UPS solves continuity for sensitive electronics. It does not replace whole-house backup planning.

What to do next

  1. 1

    Audit your quote language

    If the proposal says backup, verify exact hardware and circuits covered.

  2. 2

    Define critical loads first

    Start with essentials before chasing whole-home language.

  3. 3

    Run architecture comparison

    Use battery vs generator tool with your outage-duration reality.

Related reads

FAQ

Will my panels power my home automatically in an outage?

Not unless your system includes backup hardware and wiring designed for islanded operation.

Why does solar shut down when the grid goes down?

Anti-islanding protection prevents energizing utility lines during outages.

Do I still need a UPS?

Often yes for networking, desktops, and medical electronics that cannot tolerate transfer blips.